Wednesday, 19 February 2014

Tough penalties loom as Museveni signs Anti-Pornography Bill into law

Promoters of pornographic material could soon be in trouble
after the President signed the Anti-Pornography Bill, 2011 into law.
Publishers, broadcasters, film importers and exporters, artists, bar
owners and internet café operators are the likely culprits. Ethics minister Simon Lokodo announced the President’s assent to the Bill at the government Media Centre yesterday.

The announcement came on the heels of Mr
Museveni’s indication at the weekend that he would soon sign the
anti-gays Bill into law, provoking a backlash from the West where US
President Barack Obama called the legislation an “affront to human
rights” with potential to “complicate our valued relationship with
Uganda.”

Fr Lokodo said pornography had pervaded the
Ugandan society, becoming an insidious social problem that had eaten
society to the “marrow.” He said children had become innocent victims.
Other costs of the vice, he said, included the rise in HIV/Aids
infections, murders, teenage pregnancies and school drop-outs.

Section Two of the law defines pornography as “any
representation through publication, exhibition, cinematography,
indecent show, information technology, or by whatever means of a person
engaged in real or stimulated explicit sexual activities or any
representation of sexual parts of a person for primary sexual
excitement.”

Under this definition, people who skimpily dress
may fall prey to the legislation. “If your miniskirt falls within the
ambit of this definition then I am afraid you will be caught up by the
law,” the minister said.